Vauxhall Corsa GSE Is Coming to Reignite the Griffin’s Hot-Hatch Flame

Eight years is a long time in hot-hatch exile. That’s how long it’s been since the last Vauxhall Corsa VXR snarled off the production line, taking with it the kind of torque-steering, front-tire-melting mischief that once defined Vauxhall’s performance reputation. Now, the griffin is sharpening its claws again.

Vauxhall has confirmed that a performance version of the Corsa—badged Corsa GSE—will arrive later this year, marking the brand’s first proper hot hatch of the electric era. And this time, the fireworks will be powered by volts rather than boost.

GSE Means Business Now

The GSE badge isn’t just a sporty trim anymore. Relaunched last July as a sub-brand for genuinely performance-honed EVs, it made its first modern statement with the 276-hp Vauxhall Mokka GSE. That car nearly doubled the output of the standard Mokka Electric and backed it up with meaningful chassis upgrades—proof that GSE now stands for more than black wheels and contrast stitching.

Expect the Corsa GSE to follow that template, only with less mass and more attitude.

Vauxhall’s teaser image reveals little beyond swollen arches and bespoke 18-inch alloys, but the visual message is clear: this won’t be your local delivery-spec electric supermini. If the Mokka’s playbook is reused, we’re likely looking at the same 276-hp front-mounted motor (shared with the Abarth 600e), plus a proper limited-slip differential to keep the inside wheel from vaporizing under full throttle.

The Mokka GSE also gained uprated anti-roll bars, stiffer rear bushings, bigger brakes, and sticky Michelin Pilot Sport EV rubber. Transplant that hardware into the lighter Corsa, and suddenly the Mokka’s already brisk 5.9-second 0–62 mph time looks vulnerable. A mid-five-second sprint wouldn’t be out of the question—and in a small front-driver, that’s properly rapid.

A GTi Rival, Electrified

The Corsa GSE will line up squarely against the upcoming Peugeot e-208 GTi, its Stellantis cousin. Platform sharing is inevitable, but differentiation will be critical. Vauxhall’s design team appears ready to lean into aggression.

Clues can be found in the wild Vauxhall Corsa GSE Vision Gran Turismo concept unveiled last August. While its towering rear wing and dramatic diffuser are fantasy-league material, its sharper interpretation of Vauxhall’s Vizor front fascia could preview the production car’s face. Design boss Mark Adams has already hinted that elements of that look are under evaluation for road use.

Translation: expect something meaner, lower, and more purposeful than the standard Electric 156PS.

Heritage, Recharged

Vauxhall boss Eurig Druce says the brand “has a proud heritage of hot hatches,” and he’s not wrong. From the scrappy Vauxhall Nova GSi to the riotous Corsa VXR, small, fast Vauxhalls have long punched above their weight. The difference now? No exhaust crackle, no manual gearbox—just instant torque and the faint whir of electrons being hurled rearward.

Purists may grumble, but if the chassis tuning is right—and if that limited-slip diff does its job—the Corsa GSE could deliver the kind of front-end bite and lift-off adjustability that made its predecessors cult heroes.

Pricing and Positioning

Expect the Corsa GSE to start around £35,000, nudging above today’s range-topping Electric 156PS Ultimate (£33,720). That premium should buy not just extra power, but real hardware: brakes that can survive repeated stops, suspension that resists roll without wrecking ride quality, and steering calibrated for something more than supermarket duty.

If Vauxhall gets it right, the Corsa GSE won’t just be the brand’s first electric hot hatch—it’ll be a statement that the fun isn’t gone, merely rewired.

And after eight years of silence, the griffin’s bark is about to go electric.

Source: Vauxhall

Lepas L8 Targets RAV4 and CX-5 with Cut-Price PHEV Punch in UK Debut

When a new brand lands on British shores promising premium feel for mainstream money, skepticism is part of the job description. But that’s exactly the pitch from Lepas, which has confirmed that its L8 SUV will be the first model it sells in the United Kingdom.

If the name sounds unfamiliar, the backstory shouldn’t. Lepas is owned by Chinese heavyweight Chery and sits alongside sibling brands Omoda and Jaecoo. The name itself is a carefully engineered mash-up of “leopard,” “leap,” and “passion”—marketing poetry that signals ambition, if not subtlety.

A Flagship with Familiar Targets

The L8 arrives as a five-seat, mid-size SUV aimed squarely at Europe’s family-car sweet spot. Think of the territory currently occupied by the Mazda CX-5 and Toyota RAV4—only with a price tag expected to undercut both. That means going head-to-head with established players from Mazda and Toyota while dangling the promise of extra kit for less cash.

Under the skin, the L8 rides on Chery’s modular T1X platform, shared with its Omoda and Jaecoo cousins. That’s not necessarily a drawback; economies of scale are the not-so-secret weapon of every rising brand with global ambitions.

Plug-In Power, with EV to Follow

Although full UK specs remain under wraps, clues come from markets where the L8 is already on sale. In Indonesia, it’s offered exclusively as a plug-in hybrid, pairing a 1.5-litre four-cylinder petrol engine with an electric motor and an 18.3-kWh battery. The combined output stands at 204 horsepower, and the electric-only range is quoted at 56 miles—enough to cover most weekday commutes without waking the petrol engine.

Given that the UK-market Jaecoo 7 uses the same setup, expect the L8 to follow suit. An all-electric version is also likely waiting in the wings, especially since the T1X architecture already supports full EV applications in related models. In other words, Lepas appears to be hedging its bets—PHEV now, EV soon.

Clean Cabin, Big Screens

Inside, the L8 leans heavily into the minimalist playbook. A portrait-oriented 13.2-inch infotainment touchscreen dominates the center stack, while a 10.2-inch digital instrument cluster handles driver duties. Refreshingly, Lepas hasn’t gone full touchscreen purist: physical climate buttons and a proper volume dial remain. There’s also a wireless phone charger, because of course there is.

The brand promises “next-generation driving assistance,” though details remain vague. Expect the usual suite of lane-keeping aids, adaptive cruise control, and collision mitigation tech, but we’ll reserve judgment until the spec sheet drops.

More to Come

Full UK-market details are due in the coming weeks ahead of a summer launch. And the L8 won’t be alone for long. According to Autocar, Lepas also plans to bring its L4 and L6 crossovers to Britain, offering a mix of pure internal-combustion, plug-in hybrid, and fully electric powertrains.

For now, the L8 represents the opening salvo: a family SUV with premium aspirations and a value-driven pitch. If Lepas can deliver on price without cutting too many corners, the established order in Britain’s hyper-competitive SUV class may have reason to glance nervously in its rearview mirror.

Source: Autocar

Order Books Reopen: Alfa’s 520-HP Quadrifoglios Are Back

Alfa Romeo isn’t ready to let its loudest, angriest sedans and SUVs slip quietly into the night. Instead, it’s doubling down.

After hinting at the move during the 2026 Brussels Motor Show, Alfa has officially reopened European orders for the Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio and Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio starting in early March. More than a stopgap, this is part of a broader strategy to extend production of the current Giulia and Stelvio lineup through 2027—an olive branch to enthusiasts who weren’t ready to say goodbye to one of the last great internal-combustion Alfas.

The Cloverleaf That Refuses to Wilt

The Quadrifoglio badge isn’t marketing fluff; it’s a talisman. The four-leaf clover first appeared in 1923 when Ugo Sivocci painted it on his Alfa Romeo RL before winning the Targa Florio. A century later, it still signifies the sharpest edge of Alfa’s performance ambitions.

In modern form, that means a 520-hp twin-turbocharged 2.9-liter V-6 under the hood of both cars. It’s an engine that feels delightfully anachronistic in today’s hybrid-happy world—snappy throttle response, a midrange punch that borders on violent, and a redline that begs to be chased. In the Giulia, it drives the rear wheels in proper sport-sedan tradition. In the Stelvio, it pairs with Alfa’s Q4 all-wheel-drive system to make a 500-plus-horsepower SUV feel improbably eager.

The numbers matter. But the texture matters more.

Engineering with an Italian Accent

Both Quadrifoglios were engineered with the kind of obsessive weight-saving that would make a track-day regular nod approvingly. Aluminum for the engine. Carbon fiber for the driveshaft, hood, side skirts, spoiler, interior trim panels—even the dashboard. The goal is simple: keep the structure stiff, the mass low, and the weight distribution near ideal.

The Giulia’s active carbon-fiber front splitter adjusts airflow under the car to increase stability at speed. It’s not just aero theater; it’s functional, the kind of detail you feel through the steering wheel at triple-digit autobahn velocities.

And then there’s the exhaust. The available Akrapovič system doesn’t just make noise—it broadcasts intent. Deep at idle, metallic under load, and feral at full throttle, it’s a reminder that performance cars are meant to be heard as much as driven.

Backing up all that muscle is a mechanical limited-slip differential. In an era where brake-based torque vectoring often masquerades as sophistication, Alfa’s hardware-first approach is refreshingly analog. Power delivery is clean, traction feels natural, and corner exits are dispatched with a precision that makes you wonder why more manufacturers abandoned this formula.

Still a Driver’s Car—Yes, Even the SUV

The Giulia Quadrifoglio remains one of the most communicative sports sedans of its generation. The steering is quick and alive. The chassis feels balanced and alert. Every input—throttle, brake, steering—returns immediate feedback. It’s a car that seems to shrink around you the harder you push it.

The Stelvio Quadrifoglio, meanwhile, continues to defy physics with impressive conviction. At 520 horsepower, it has the straight-line speed to embarrass dedicated sports cars, yet it manages to corner with composure that belies its ride height. The Q4 system apportions torque with subtlety, preserving much of the rear-drive feel enthusiasts crave.

Inside, both cars lean into their motorsport heritage. Available “Racing Sparco” seats combine leather and Alcantara with exposed carbon-fiber shells, gripping you tightly without crossing into punishment. Burnished five-hole wheels—19 inches on the Giulia, 21 on the Stelvio—frame anodized gray brake calipers. Paint choices like Rosso Etna, Verde Montreal, and Blu Misano remind you that subtlety was never the point.

A Stay of Execution

Reopening orders isn’t just a business decision; it’s a cultural one. As the industry pivots toward electrification, the Quadrifoglio twins stand as unapologetic reminders of Alfa Romeo’s combustion-fueled DNA. They represent a philosophy centered on balance, mechanical purity, and emotional engagement.

Extending production to 2027 gives enthusiasts a few more years to experience that formula the old-fashioned way: six cylinders, two turbos, rear-biased dynamics, and a four-leaf clover on the fender.

In a market increasingly defined by silent acceleration and digital interfaces, the Giulia and Stelvio Quadrifoglio still speak fluent gasoline. And for now, at least, Alfa Romeo is letting them keep talking.

Source: Alfa Romeo

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